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Curse was a gaming company that managed the video game mod host CurseForge, wiki host Gamepedia, and the Curse Network of gaming community websites.. The company was headquartered in Huntsville, Alabama, and had offices in San Francisco, New York City, Los Angeles, Brighton, and Berlin.
Enchant is a free software project developed as part of the AbiWord word processor with the aim of unifying access to the various existing spell-checker software. Enchant wraps a common set of functionality present in a variety of existing products/libraries, and exposes a stable API/ABI for doing so.
A few years later, Mary Ann Horton, who had maintained the vi and termcap sources at Berkeley, went to AT&T Corporation and made a different version using terminfo, which became part of UNIX System III and UNIX System V. Due to licensing restrictions on the latter, the BSD and AT&T versions of the library were developed independently.
ROXs 12 is a binary system of pre-main-sequence stars.It belongs to the Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex. [4] The surface temperature of the primary star is 3900 ± 100 K. [3] ROXs 12 is much younger than the Sun with an age of 7.6 +4.1
As the new version, ncurses is a free and open-source software emulation of the System V Release 4.0 (SVr4) curses, which was an enhancement over the discontinued 4.4 BSD curses. [13] The XSI Curses standard issued by X/Open is explicitly and closely modeled on UNIX System V .
The Rox, a nickname for the Colorado Rockies; The Rox, a nickname for the Houston Rockets; Brockton Rox (disambiguation), baseball teams in Brockton, Massachusetts; St. Cloud Rox (disambiguation), baseball teams in St. Cloud, Minnesota
Cathy's Curse [i] (French: Une si gentille petite fille, lit. Such a sweet little girl) is a 1977 supernatural horror film directed by Eddy Matalon and starring Alan Scarfe, Beverly Murray, and Randi Allen. The film follows a young girl who is possessed by the spirit of her deceased aunt.
X3 Curse of Xanathon was written by Douglas Niles, with art by Tim Truman, and published by TSR in 1982 as a 32-page booklet with an outer folder. [3] The module was designed as an adventure for 5th-7th level D&D characters. [2] It was developed by Douglas Niles and Alan Hammack, and edited by Deborah Campbell Ritchie. [5]